John Franklin Candy was a Canadian
comedian and actor. Born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada,
Candy was a member of Toronto's The Second City comedy
troupe and gained widespread North American popularity
when, in 1976, he became a cast member on the influential
Toronto-based TV comedy-variety show Second City Television
(SCTV).
From there he went on to star in such Hollywood movies
as Splash, Planes, Trains & Automobiles, Spaceballs,
Brewster's Millions and Uncle Buck. He typically played
characters who, while they lived somewhat seedy lives,
often had their hearts in the right place. Candy was
lauded by some as a true comic genius and this lay
in his ability to portray an "everyman" that
the audience could identify with. Candy was also a
dramatic actor and appeared in films like JFK and The
Silent Partner.
In the 1980s Candy also appeared in an HBO spoof
documentary titled The Canadian Conspiracy about the
supposed subversion of the United States by Canadian-born
media personalities.
In the early 1990s, Candy recorded a voice for the
TV movie The Magic 7. However, this movie stayed in
production for a very long time, due to animation difficulties
and production delays. It was shelved for quite some
time, but is now due to be released in 2005, more than
ten years after the actor's death.
John Candy died at the young age of 43 of a heart
attack while filming on location in Durango, Mexico,
for the movie Wagons East. He had been warned several
times by his doctors to cut his weight due to his genetic
predisposition to heart disease from which his father
had died but he refused, stating that his portly frame
was what gave him his film roles. |